Charles "Bird"
Parker Jr. was born in Kansas City, Missouri on August 29, 1920.
Charlie is considered the greatest jazz saxophonist that ever lived
and he was the founding father of Bebop..

Charlie Parker charged onto the
national scene at a time of tension. It was the 1940s, World War II
was raging and nothing seemed certain. The time was just right for
saxophonist whose energy and originality would turn jazz upside-down.
Parker was one of the most influential artists of the 20th century.
More than any of his contemporaries, he was responsible for
catapulting jazz into the realm of art. His dexterity on the alto
saxophone has never been equaled, and musicians and scholars still
marvel at his harmonic and melodic gifts.

Parker's status as a cultural icon may have as much to do with his
times as his sound. In the 1940s many Americans were parlaying postwar
prosperity into suburban complacency, he symbolized nonconformity and
rebellion. ``His music appeared to many to be radical, abrasive,
challenging and disturbing,'' said David Meltzer, editor of Reading
Jazz, a historical survey of writings on the music. ``He completely
transformed how the music was to be played, and how it w as to be
heard.'' Without Parker, modern jazz would have been impossible.
Still, few of the jazz fans who heard his early Kansas City
performances would have imagined him entering the jazz pantheon.

Parker was born in Kansas City, Kan., but grew up on the Missouri
side. He got interested in jazz early, quitting school at age 15 so
that he could sit in at jam sessions. It was a good time to pursue a
jazz career: The nonstop criminal activity of the Pendergast era had
turned Kansas City into a 24-hour town, full of boisterous clubs and
opportunities to play. But by most accounts, Parker's early efforts on
Kansas City bandstands were less than successful. An apocryphal story
tells of drummer Jo Jones throwing a cymbal at the saxophonist to shoo
him away from a jam session. The rejection prompted Parker to head for
what jazz musicians call ``the woodshed.'' That means working at the
music steadily, emerging only when you feel you're good enough.

And soon enough, he got better. His improved sound - influenced by the
serene style of Lester Young - began to earn him the respect of local
musicians. Still, in the early 1940s Parker left for New York, where
he had heard that new things were happening. Upon arrival, he quickly
found his place among a group of musicians who regularly gathered at a
Harlem jazz venue called Minton's Playhouse. Among them were trumpeter
Dizzy Gillespie, pianist Thelonious Monk and drummer Kenny Clarke.
They were al l into a new thing that came to be called bebop. With its
fast tempos, jumpy melodies and small-group orientation, bebop was a
bold alternative to the swinging big-band jazz that had held sway
during World War II. It wasn't dance music, and it wasn't designed to
fade into the background. Instead, it was music designed for serious
listening. And the mostly African-American musicians who invented it
saw it not only as a way to express themselves, but also to gain them
the kind of respect afforded classical musicians. They saw themselves
not as entertainers, but as artists. ``They had created a language
that was different than that of their predecessors,'' said trumpeter
Roy Hargrove, who recently recorded an album of Parker tunes with
bassist Christian McBride and pianist Stephen Scott. ``These were
musicians who were getting frustrated with the constraints that the
swing style was putting on them.''

Although Parker collaborated with other musicians in working out some
of the tenets of bebop (so named because of the music's quirky
character), he is generally considered most responsible for its
creation, said Nathaniel Mackey, co-editor of the book Moment's
Notice: Jazz in Poetry & Prose. ``His importance is widely
acknowledged and widely agreed upon,'' said Mackey, who is professor
of literature at the University of California, Santa Cruz. ``He
brought the music known as jazz into its modern incarnation.

``It wasn't just him - that needs to be stressed. He, Dizzy Gillespie
and Thelonious Monk were the three main forces. But Parker was
recognized even among his peers as a leader of sorts - the kind of
person people reserve the term 'genius' for.'' At the time, some
jazz fans held Parker and his colleagues in contempt. They longed for
the more comforting, less anxious rhythms of swing, and looked upon
the boppers as enemies of the music. They also opposed the drug-ridden
lifestyle of some o f the musicians involved. (Parker was well-known
for his abuse of drugs.)

This anti-bop attitude persisted for many years. Writing in the 1960s,
the British poet and jazz critic Philip Larkin condemned bebop as an
unfortunate example of modernism in the arts. ``How glibly I had
talked of modern jazz,'' he wrote in All What Jazz: A Record Diary,
``without realizing the force of the adjective: this was modern jazz,
and Parker was a modern jazz player just as Picasso was a modern
painter and Pound a mode rn poet ... There could hardly have been a
conciser summary of what I don't believe about art.'' From its
inception, this new form of jazz was well on its way to becoming
marginalized - art music still performed in clubs but suitable for
concert halls. Although bebop was never as popular as the big-band
sound, the music quickly became codifi ed as the soundtrack of the
intellectual and the hip. Parker, after all, seemed to be a hipster's
ideal - cool and soulful, spontaneously expressing the angst of the
age. But they might have been surprised to learn that he had studied
the work of Igor Stravinsky and other 20th-century composers.

Neither was the saxophonist opposed to mainstream success. He toured
with promoter Norman Granz's ``Jazz at the Philharmonic'' road show,
which was aimed at bringing bebop to a wider audience. He also
recorded with a string section. But eventually, Parker began to lose
the battle with his longstanding drug problem. After years of abusing
his health, he was unable to save himself. After his death on March
12, 1955, at the age of 34, newspapers cited the cause as a heart
attack or pneumonia.

Since his demise, death by self-abuse has become a recurring theme
among the artistically talented. The rock world alone has produced
numerous examples of stars who burned out early, Jerry Garcia being
only the most recent. Indeed, to some people Parker is more notable as
a celebrity junkie than as an artist who redefined an entire musical
genre. But to the musicians who continue to learn from his art, the
failings of his life are merely secondary. ``My concern is not with
his personal problems,'' said pianist Stephen Scott. ``When I hear his
music, I hear greatness.'' It's ironic that Parker - a rebel and an
iconoclast - should be the progenitor of a style now considered sober
and conservative. Still, he laid the foundation upon which the future
of jazz will be built. ``He lived fast, and there's a kind of glamour
in that,'' Meltzer said. ``But there's no doubt that the work
supersedes the legend.''